Country Folks, Crop Comments
Crop
Posted on June 17, 2026
According to John Idowu, Ph.D., plant science Extension agronomist at New Mexico State University, soil compaction can greatly challenge cropland performance and reduce yields, depending on the type of crop grown. However, there are many strategies that producers can use to minimize soil compaction ...
Country Folks
by Sally Colby 
Posted on June 12, 2026
By the time this appears in Country Folks , the numbers will have changed. Stories about New World screwworm (NWS) are hitting nearly every news outlet. Once endemic in the U.S., efforts to push the NWS southward began in the 1950s and resulted in eradication in the U.S. by 1966. Now it’s back, and ...
Country Folks
by Sally Colby 
Posted on June 10, 2026
According to a 2025 state agriculture overview, New York State is home to 30,000 farm operations, 650,000 milking cows, 500 concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) with 300 or more mature cows and is number five in the nation for milk production. Extensive acreage in hay, haylage, corn grain,...
Country Folks
by Sally Colby 
Posted on June 10, 2026
When the price of lamb dropped in the 1990s, Janet McNally had to make changes in the way she raised sheep. McNally spoke recently at the Pennsylvania Forage Conference in Lancaster, PA. She decided to focus on grazing when she found her income was less than desirable after deducting feed, vet suppl...
Country Folks
by Deborah Jeanne Sergeant 
Posted on June 10, 2026
The gold standard of research is long-term findings. These demonstrate lasting trends and a greater likelihood of predicting future outcomes. Michael Cavigelli, retired lead scientist with USDA-ARS’s Farming Systems Project (FSP), presented “Findings from the Beltsville Long-Term Cropping Systems Pr...
Country Folks, Crop Comments
Crop Comments
Posted on June 10, 2026
“Most corn is in the ground. Fields that were weather-caused fallow can still produce a very high-quality forage from sorghum. Sorghum is planted after corn because the soil has to be warmer than for corn for rapid germination. Thus, planting after early winter triticale and haylage harvest gets tho...
Country Folks
by Laura Rodley ilac Ridge Farm in Brattleboro offers Vermont?s 
Posted on June 3, 2026
Lilac Ridge Farm in Brattleboro offers Vermont’s first organic certified creemee, certified by the Northeast Organic Farming Association (NOFA-VT). They reopened their trailer-side window this year to serve creemees in time for Mother’s Day – and for the arrival of hot weather. Since 2007, they had ...
Country Folks
by Lee Mielke 
Posted on June 3, 2026
It’s June Dairy Month once again. Hopefully, that never changes. It’s been an annual reminder of one of the blessings America should be grateful for but find all too easy to take for granted because dairy is always there. Walk into any grocery store and you’ll find an abundance of safe, top quality,...
Country Folks
by Sonja Heyck-Merlin 
Posted on June 3, 2026
Maple Wind Farm is inoculating their winter-laying houses with Lactobacillus, a beneficial bacterium, to improve animal health. It’s an on-farm trial in collaboration between the farm and the Land Care Cooperative, a farmer-led group focused on building healthy, water-retaining soils, reducing flood...
Lifestyle
Courtney Llewellyn 
June 24, 2026
Extended holiday weekends tend to fall on national holidays throughout the year, giving workers and students an opportunity to enjoy an extra day off ...
Lifestyle
Courtney Llewellyn 
June 22, 2026
The chaos of the Revolution swept through the Mohawk Valley frontier, with families, farms and entire communities hanging in the balance. Many of thos...
Events
Courtney Llewellyn 
June 20, 2026
Farmstead 1868 will host its annual Cazenovia Lavender Festival on Saturday and Sunday, July 11 and 12, from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. at 4690 Shephards Rd., C...
Lifestyle
by Sam Mazotta 
June 18, 2026
Dear Paw's Corner: My partner wants to buy a purebred kitten over the internet. I think it’s a terrible idea, and we would do just fine with a lovable...